Background and objective: Acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) is a common blood cancer marked by heterogeneity in disease and diverse genetic abnormalities. Additional therapies are needed as the 5-year survival remains below 30%. Trametinib is a mitogen-activated extracellular signal-regulated kinase (MEK) inhibitor that is widely used in solid tumors and also in tumors with activating RAS mutations. A subset of patients with AML carry activating RAS mutations; however, a small-scale clinical trial with trametinib showed little efficacy. Here, we sought to identify transcriptomic determinants of trametinib sensitivity in AML.
Methods: We tested the activity of trametinib against a panel of tumor cells from patients with AML ex vivo and compared this with RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq) data from untreated blasts from the same patient samples. We then used a correlation analysis between gene expression and trametinib sensitivity to identify potential biomarkers predictive of drug response.
Results: We found that a subset of AML tumor cells were sensitive to trametinib ex vivo, only a fraction of which (3/10) carried RAS mutations. On the basis of our RNA-Seq analysis we found that markers of trametinib sensitivity are associated with a myeloid differentiation profile that includes high expression of CD14 and CLEC7A (Dectin-1), similar to the gene expression profile of monocytes. Further characterization confirmed that trametinib-sensitive samples display features of monocytic differentiation with high CD14 surface expression and were enriched for the M4 subtypes of the FAB classification.
Conclusions: Our study identifies additional molecular markers that can be used with molecular features including RAS status to identify patients with AML that may benefit from trametinib treatment.
© 2024. The Author(s).